What is UV Light and How Does it Kill Viruses?

What is UV light and how does it kill virus

UV light, or ‘ultraviolet light’, is a form of non-visible electromagnetic light. The main source of UV is the sun. There are three types of UV light: UV-A, UV-B, and UV-C. They’re differentiated by the wavelength of the light, with UV-A light has the largest wavelength, ranging from 315-400nm. UV-C light has the shortest wavelength, from 100-280nm.

Ultraviolet light with wavelenth

How Does UV-C Light Kill Viruses?

As UV-C light has the shortest wavelength, it also has the most energy of the UV light types. That means it’s the most powerful at destroy the genetic material inside viruses and other microbes.

UV light disinfects virus

UV-C light at a specific wavelength of 254nm has been found to be most effective in killing coronavirus such as a severe acute respiratory virus (SARS-CoV) and Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) as well as other viruses like H1N1 influenza.

More detailed data and knowledge about using UV light kill virus check ‘Common UV Lights Aren’t Great at Killing COVID-19’ and ‘UV Light Disinfects Masks, Harms Filtration Less Than 2%

Is UV-C Light Safe?

Most of the UV-C light produced by the sun is absorbed in the atmosphere, so our bodies and skin rarely receive much of it. That’s a good thing since UV-C light is considered harmful to the body.

UV lights used for disinfection generate UV-C with wavelengths in the range of 254-265nm. This wavelength is great at destroying genetic materials inside viruses. However, that also means it’s good at destroying materials inside our bodies.

erythema, skin canceraUV light killing and disinfect virus

UV-C light can cause corneal injuries to the eyes, as well as photokeratitis (a feeling of sand in the eyes). Sunburn and more serious skin cancer can also be caused by UV-C light.

The American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) recommends a limit of 3mJ/cm2 for UV light in the actinic range (200 nm – 315 nm), which covers UV-C light. For a typical 0.7W UV sanitizer lamp, that means the exposure times at varying distances are shown in the table below:

Distance from UV lightTime
2m171s
1m43s
50cm11s
10cm0.4s

Direct contact with UV-C light should be avoided. If working with it, it should only be dealt with when using protective gear such as protective glasses and clothing.

UV light expose to protective gear

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Kashi Midkiff
2020-10-24 12:27 pm

The tanning bulbs from 1990’s a business could specify what nanometer range or ask where specific bulb registered on nanometer.
Just a comment, as UV-C bulbs for novel applications unheard of.
Find info very well written and informative. Obivously Nursing Homes, any dwelling with multiple patients attempting to use UVC LIGHTS TO PROTECT Against Virus. Glad to know I need to understand, we all should!

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